1. Respect for both partners (and their genders).
If you respect your partner, you respect them when they get a little
too drunk at a Christmas party. You respect them when they are naked.
You respect them when they are crying. You respect them when they don’t
look their best. You respect them when they are talking loudly or acting
silly or being gross. You do these things because they are a person
with flaws and strange habits and imperfections. You don’t get to have
lines drawn in the sand about the way they can act, as long as their
behavior is benign. The only way you don’t respect them is if they do
mean or harmful things, in which case you hold them to the same
standards you hold every human being. Because the second you start
saying things like “man up” or “ladies don’t…” or “if you were a real
[insert gender here]” is the second you should look into dating a Real
Doll.
2. Genuine attraction.
All you need to do is date someone once who lets you know, either
subtly or in graphic detail, that they do not think you are either a)
attractive enough for them personally, or b) attractive enough to
present in public, to know that that shit is terrible and should not be
pushed on anyone. I am not saying we cannot be attracted to people for
reasons other than the physical, but if you straight up do not feel
turned on by your partner or do not feel that they are good enough for
you in terms of appearance (even if that makes you kind of a dick), do
them a favor and don’t date them. No one wants to feel like they’re
constantly batting out of their league.
3. Similar ideas about money.
Is there anything that can more messily implode a couple from within
than having money problems? If you two are not on a similar track when
it comes to how you handle your finances, what your financial goals are,
and what you both expect to contribute to the relationship, I can
almost guarantee you’re in for at least a few nights of screaming at
each other whilst throwing IKEA’s entire flatware catalogue at the wall.
The fact is that some people are going to want to spend more, others
want to save, and some people are going to be uncomfortable with a huge
disparity in income. That’s just human nature. (Did we learn nothing
from the monstrosity that was Jack Berger and Carrie? Come on, people.)
4. Corresponding goals for the future.
If someone tells you they don’t want marriage and kids, and that they
aren’t going to change their mind, please do everyone a favor and
listen to them.
Please. There is no ↑ ↑ ↓ ↓ ← → ← → B A to type in while they’re
sleeping and magically change their mind. Let’s all nip this shit
collectively in the bud, okay? Because there is nothing wrong with
someone not wanting the same thing as you, there is only something wrong
with trying to force someone to change once they’re already in love
with you.
5. An understanding that cheating can be emotional as well as physical.
Spoiler alert: You don’t actually have to touch genitals to have
cheated on someone and/or betrayed their trust. If you are having deep,
personal, romantic conversations with someone behind your partner’s
back, if you are still harboring feelings for someone else, if you are
seriously considering other possibilities while still completely
attached to your current flame — you are being an asshole and should
stop it. It’s insane how many people don’t acknowledge the myriad ways
that someone can be cheated on that don’t actually involve sex. Do you
really think that your partner finding out that you’ve been exchanging
passionate emails with an ex is going to be that much less destructive
than having slept with someone else? I mean, in many cases, knowing that
there were actual feelings involved make it all the worse, as it can’t
just be brushed off as a drunken mistake. Let’s at least provide each
other the decency of breaking up with our partners before engaging in
Nicholas Sparks-esque gchats with the cute girl from work.
6. Friends and family who are at least decent human beings.
No one is asking that your new SO’s parents be multimillionaires who
enjoy championing human rights around the world and having hilarious
conversations over long cocktail hours in their mahogany study, but they
should at least not be judgmental assholes. And their friends should
live up to a similar standard of “not making you feel like someone’s
Debbie Downer mother who crashed the party every time you get within 10
feet of them.” No one is forced to like their friend or relative’s new
partner, but they are required to treat them like good people who are
deserving of a minimum of respect and kindness until proven otherwise.
And if nights with your potential in-laws mostly consist of bigoted,
passive-aggressive lines of questioning and under-seasoned food, it’s
likely not going uphill from there.
7. An earnest desire to be in a long-term commitment.
Yeah, no matter how much romantic comedies are trying to tell us that
our only job in life is to wear down that cold-hearted-yet-super-hot
guy at the coffee shop until he magically decides he wants a serious
relationship, that is just never a good idea. If someone is telling you
from the get-go that they are not into commitment, and that they
do
like you but just don’t want to be tied down, perhaps it is because
they actually feel that way and aren’t speaking in some magic code that
you have to decipher with your Little Orphan Annie decoder ring. Even if
you do manage to taser them long enough to sit still for a
decent-length relationship, are you really winning anything? You know
that they are not happy with it, and you will have no reason to be
surprised if they one day up and leave. It’s probably best to just avoid
them as a whole, or let them come to you when they’ve decided
otherwise.
8. The exact same taste in entertainment as you.
Sike sike sike SUPERSIKE. It is actually really weird when people are
legitimately like, “I could never date someone who has shitty taste in
music.” First of all, who the hell is to say that what you deem as
“shitty” is some universal litmus test for “interesting or worth
respecting?” Like I am supposed to be an inherently unlovable human
being with nothing to offer the world — let alone a romantic partner —
simply because I listen to the occasional Hanson or Mandy Moore record?
You can get out of my airspace, pop culture elitists, and you can take
your Radiohead masturbation jams with you.
9. A history of respecting exes on both sides.
As much as we might want our new significant other to go on an
unbridled trash talking spree about their ex the second we get with
them, it probably doesn’t reflect well on anyone to be super bitter or
petty over someone who is no longer in their life. Even if an ex hurt
your new boo, harping on it for extended periods of time and going out
of their way to say and do nasty things towards them only shows that
your current flame is either a) hung up on them still or b) a vicious
person who will likely do that to anyone post-breakup. I mean, there was
a point at which all of these sweet nothings being whispered in your
ear were directed towards the ex who is now getting dragged through the
mud by an SUV covered with knives. What do you think will happen to you
when it’s your turn?
10. Honesty.
It sounds so obvious: We should be honest and forthright with people
we claim to love. Like, of course. But it’s funny how much we forget
that honesty extends to every part of our life with someone — it’s not
just “I don’t cheat on them and we’re cool.” Lies of omission count as
lies. Not being up-front about the things we want from the beginning
count as lies. Deciding that there is only a certain amount of yourself
you are willing to show to the other person, or facets of your
personality you deem acceptable to expose, is setting yourself up for an
inevitable failure (or at least huge problems). Part of being able to
trust someone is knowing that, even if the question is uncomfortable,
you’re going to get a legitimate answer. And if there are parts of your
life you are not willing to be real about if put on the spot, perhaps
you should consider your desire to “share” your life in the first place.
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